6,899 research outputs found

    An invariant-based damage model for human and animal skins

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    Constitutive modelling of skins that account for damage effects is important to provide insight for various clinical applications, such as skin trauma and injury, artificial skin design, skin aging, disease diagnosis, surgery, as well as comparative studies of skin biomechanics between species. In this study, a new damage model for human and animal skins is proposed for the first time. The model is nonlinear, anisotropic, invariant-based, and is based on the Gasser–Ogden–Holzapfel constitutive law initially developed for arteries. Taking account of the mean collagen fibre orientation and its dispersion, the new model can describe a wide range of skins with damage. The model is first tested on the uniaxial test data of human skin and then applied to nine groups of uniaxial test data for the human, swine, rabbit, bovine and rhino skins. The material parameters can be inversely estimated based on uniaxial tests using the optimization method in MATLAB with a root mean square error ranged between 2.15% and 12.18%. A sensitivity study confirms that the fibre orientation dispersion and the mean fibre angle are among the most important factors that influence the behaviour of the damage model. In addition, these two parameters can only be reliably estimated if some histological information is provided. We also found that depending on the location of skins, the tissue damage may be brittle controlled by the fibre breaking limit (i.e., when the fibre stretch is greater than 1.13–1.32, depending on the species), or ductile (due to both the fibre and the matrix damages). The brittle damages seem to occur mostly in the back, and the ductile damages are seen from samples taken from the belly. The proposed constitutive model may be applied to various clinical applications that require knowledge of the mechanical response of human and animal skins

    Selective crystallisation facilitated by nanonucleants for downstream bioseparation of a protein mixture

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    Bioseparation is a major bottleneck in the manufacture of biopharmaceuticals such as proteins. Crystallisation is a cost-effective, rapid, and robust alternative technology to conventional chromatography steps in downstream separation processes. This thesis aims to investigate protein crystallisation as a feasible approach to separate proteins from a mixture for bioseparation. In this work, lysozyme- thaumatin mixture is used as the model binary protein mixture. Both µL-scale hanging-drop vapour-diffusion (HDVD) and mL-scale batch crystallisation methods were employed. We report an experimental evidence of direct selective protein crystallisation from a binary protein mixture solution where both proteins are supersaturated and crystallisable under an identical crystallisation condition. Results from both methods showed that protein impurity, even at low concentration level, would delay target protein crystallisation with an extended induction time. When silica particles were introduced as nanonucleants to facilitate crystallisation, target protein crystallisation was significantly improved with much shorter induction time. It was also indicated that the effectiveness of silica on crystallisation depended on the type of silica particle, silica loading amount, and impurity concentration. This study also revealed the critical role of agitation in obtaining consistent and reproducible results when moving from preliminary qualitative screenings using HDVD method to quantitative batch crystallisation experiments. Apart from improving reproducibility of crystallisation experiments, agitation also had impacts on both crystallisation rate, yield, and crystal size. In conclusion, this work demonstrates that protein crystallisation is a feasible and scalable methodology to separate a target protein from a complex mixture environment.Open Acces
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